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Corn remains as a stable crop
Antique columnist Roy Booth writes on the debt that American history owes to corn and to the native Americans who shared their knowledge.
Excess rainfall impacting tomato plants
Learn how to keep your tomato plants healthy and productive through heavy rain periods.
Michigan wind farm completed
UBLY, Mich. — Construction of Michigan’s largest commercial-scale wind farm near Ubly, has been successfully completed, despite the complexities of the project. John Deere Renewables, a national leader in wind energy development, and Consumers Energy, the utility purchasing the power, announced Michigan Wind 1 went into commercial operation Dec. 16. Plans to hold a ribbon
Commentary: Great Lakes Energy faces promising, challenging times
Reporter Chris Kick recently toured some Great Lakes energy facilities, to learn about the opportunities and challenges in the region.
Tips to get your kids to eat kale
Kale is a nutritious food, containing vitamins A, C, B6 and K, manganese, calcium, potassium and iron. Use these tips to get your kids to eat kale.
Salad recall prompts questions of parasite
A multistate outbreak of cyclospora is under investigation. Find out which brands it has been linked to, where it’s been sold and what symptoms it causes.
Seagoing cowboys: Ohioan returns to Poland 69 years after historic voyage
Between 1945 and 1947, the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration and the Brethren Relief Center of the Church of the Brethren organized approximately 360 shipments of livestock — mostly horses, heifers and mules — to war-torn countries.
Wooly Pig Farm Brewery brings Bavaria to Coshocton County
A craft brewery in rural Coschocton County focuses on maintaining a historic farm’s integrity while bringing traditional German beers to the area.
The 20-minute projects that take much longer
Eric Keller offers insight into his project-planning process.
Pennsylvania FFA: From trash to tractor
It started with an ad on eBay. Someone in Pymatuning, Pa., was getting rid of a rusted, broken-down 1937 Farmall F12 and at $535, Kenny and Brandon Ball thought it was a pretty good deal. The father-son team liked to restore antique tractors and they thought that parts from the F12 could be used on one of their current projects. It was 2001 when they bought the tractor and took it to their New Castle, Pa., home. Brandon was only 9 years old.






